The
early history of railways was all about fierce rivalry, whether that was with
the then-dominant canal companies or other railway companies trying to beat
their competitors to build out their networks. Some even went as far as hiring
gunfighters to beat the competition.
These
days, things are a lot more civilised and rail companies are working hand in
hand with other companies who might be considered their bitter rivals –
airlines, taxis and even electric scooter fleets – to get people from door to
door.
Jason
Geall, vice president Northern Europe for American Express Global Business
Travel, says, “We are seeing some interesting new partnerships, often with
historic competitors coming together to work as collaborators, to provide more
integrated travel experiences. These initiatives are being driven by changing
traveller behaviour and expectations, and social and economic trends – for
example, the rising importance of topics such as sustainable travel and
traveller wellbeing.”
Trains and
planes
On
long-haul routes, rail companies and airlines are starting to realise that
rather than trying to drive each other out of business on certain key routes,
working together might actually be a better answer.
SNCF
and Air France work together on their Air&Rail programme which offers
benefits that are typically only offered to business travellers on interlining
airlines, such as combined bookings, guaranteed seats on later services and
loyalty miles.
TGV
Air services are available from 14 French cities including Lille, Strasbourg
and Lyon to Charles de Gaulle. There are also services linking Paris and
Brussels as well as Amsterdam with Brussels and Antwerp.
Amex
GBT’s Geall believes this works when rail companies offer “an air-like
experience”. He says, “One passenger name record can include flight plus a
dedicated train or carriage, with comfort and service levels that replicate the
aircraft cabin experience.”
In
Germany, Lufthansa are offering ‘flights’ between Frankfurt and Cologne that
are bookable via the Amadeus GDS air display but which are actually rail services
operated by Deutsche Bahn.
Others
are looking at similar partnerships. NS Dutch Railways, Thalys and KLM were due
to start cooperating on the Brussels-Amsterdam Schiphol route at the end of
March this year but this has now been delayed because of the coronavirus
crisis.
The
partnership would see KLM reduce the number of flights on the route from five
to four flights a day, in combination with an improved Air&Rail product
aboard the Thalys.
The
airline said it planned to gradually cut back the number of flights between
Brussels and Schiphol but with KLM’s summer schedule – along with those of
other airlines – now ripped up, the plans to work together have been postponed.
“As
soon as we can leave the coronavirus crisis behind, we will start building
again,” said an airline spokeswoman. “Expanding our collaboration with rail
service providers is a very important part of our sustainability program Fly
Responsibly. We need to cooperate with other parties because KLM wants to
create a sustainable future for aviation, but cannot do this alone. Our
objective is to replace more short distance flights in the future, ie. to
London, by train.”
Heathrow
Express, which runs frequent fast rail services between Paddington station in
London and Heathrow Airport, has a long-standing and “incredibly successful”
partnership with Aer Lingus, according to the train operator’s sales manager
Richard Young.
Heathrow
Express tickets are available in the booking workflow of aerlingus.com where
passengers flying into Heathrow are automatically offered a Heathrow Express
ticket as an ancillary product.
Young
says Heathrow Express has launched a new API which will give the company a lot
more flexibility and functionality to work with partners. “One of our
objectives is to try and get into our partners’ booking workflows as early in
the process as we possibly can whether that is airlines or hotels,” he says.
Bertrand
Blais, vice president of product management at Amex GBT-owned KDS, says, “You
will see more and more agreements between airlines and rail companies for short
journeys. There is a financial interest for airlines because short-haul flights
are difficult to make profitable.”
He
adds that one challenge is that integrating rail and air requires innovation in
payment, making sure that providers of different segments offered by different
providers get paid, something that KDS has achieved.
Another
stumbling block is the commercial benefits of the deal. “The majority of our
customers don’t want corporate bundles because they have their own programmes
with specific suppliers,” says Blais.
Trains and
automobiles
Heathrow
Express has also been looking at how it can work with ground transportation
companies. Two summers ago, the train operator ran a pilot called Onwards
Travel which looked at how to integrate the rail journey and a private transfer
by taxi in a single, seamless journey.
Following
the successful pilot, the company has now issued an RFP to a mixture of private
hire taxi companies and ride-hailing companies – which BTN Europe understands
includes Uber – with a winning bidder to be announced this spring.
“We
have identified corporates as being a potential market for the product,” says
Young. “It would be my hope that corporate companies see this as being not just
a time-saving method of getting to and from the airport but also a cost
saving.”
Young
says it will also help the environment. “We see this as being an important part
of limiting the number of car journeys to and from the airport,” he says. The
airport has made a commitment that 55% of the journeys to it would be made by
public transport by 2030.
Collaborations
between rail and car providers are not a new thing. In 2015, Lufthansa launched
Lufthansa Express, an umbrella for onward travel from the airline’s hubs at
Frankfurt and Munich which included high-speed ICE trains, long-distance buses,
limousines and helicopter services.
The
following year the airline added car2Go, a car-sharing platform – that is
itself a collaboration between erstwhile rivals BMW and Daimler – to the Lufthansa
Express offering. This gives airline passengers the ability to use shared
Mercedes-Benz and Smart cars and avoid parking, airport and standard car2Go
registration fees.
In
2017, car rental company Enterprise announced a partnership in the UK with
Virgin Trains East Coast to offer car club vehicles at stations along the east
coast mainline. Dan Gursel, Enterprise Car Club managing director, said at the
time: “Integrating with key transport hubs is the next evolution of car clubs.
They are quickly becoming the go-to option for people who want fast, easy
access to a vehicle, wherever they are and at any time.”
Two
years on, the company says it has car club vehicles within 500 metres of some
180 mainline and regional rail stations across the UK, covering around a third
of all UK rail journeys.
Last
summer, French rail company SNCF launched a new app called Assistant to replace
its popular existing app. One of the biggest changes was the integration of
transportation partners.
Karhoo
added its 150 independent transport providers, including chauffeur companies
such as Snapcar in Paris and Lyon, the Félix electric scooter network and
local private hire companies. The other new partners were Le Bus Direct airport
shuttles in Paris and Strasbourg’s bus and tram network.
At
the time, Alexandre Vos, SNCF’s general manager of e-travellers, said, “Today,
apps exist for every mode of transport, but none offers a single access point
for looking and booking for different mobility offerings.”
In
November, SNCF added the car-sharing platforms BlaBlaLines and Karos to the
SNCF assistant. Between them, the two companies have more than a million users.
The integration with Karhoo was also expanded to cover 43 towns and cities.
Since launch, the Assistant app has been downloaded more than 13.6 million
times.
Challenges and
opportunities
The
benefits of rail companies working more closely with other suppliers are clear
but perhaps the biggest challenge in this happening more frequently is related
to technology – rail content is not well established in the distribution
systems that underpin corporate travel.
Rail
companies in different countries typically use their own distribution systems.
In some countries, where rail services have been liberalised – such as the UK –
this even extends to different providers within the same country. The same is
true in Japan, another country where rail is widely used for domestic business
travel.
This
fragmentation has led to the appearance of aggregators such as Trainline and
Silverrail which can offer rail content from a range of rail companies through
a single pipe.
While
these aggregators simplify access geographically they are not good at giving
access to negotiated corporate fares, says Bertrand Blais of KDS.
Amadeus
has been at the forefront of trying to bring rail content to the GDS. It
partners with Thalys to integrate its content into the Amadeus Selling Platform
used by travel consultants. This means that consultants can compare rail and
air or combine train travel with a flight or hotel as part of a multimodal
journey.
Even
here the offer is limited. “They can provide schedule and price,” says Blais,
“but more than this is very limited.”
What
the rail sector may need is something like NDC which promises to standardise
access to add-on services in the air sector – but we could be in for a long
wait.
“There
is no IATA for rail,” says Blais. “The European Commission is looking at rail
standardisation but it is managed nationally.”
While
the landscape is fragmented, tech providers are stepping up to the challenge.
KDS launched its Neo online booking tool in 2013 and made waves by offering the
option of booking end-to-end travel. This was partly driven by KDS being
founded in France where rail is highly competitive with air on domestic routes;
rail and air content have been displayed in the same search window from the
start.
Business
travellers do not want this door-to-door service every time when using rail
though, says Blais. “The majority of business travellers are doing regular
trips, often in the same region and they know what they want – a specific train
at a specific time and sometimes the carriage they want. What we notice is that
if they travel long-haul, this is where they want to be assisted, where they
are keen on recommendations,” says Blais.
“In
Sweden, most travellers are passing through Stockholm Central to Arlanda
airport and what the traveller wants is to book the Arlanda Express through the
online platform. It is similar with Heathrow Express.” Access to rail content
is important for KDS and it is currently finalising the integration of Finnish
rail into the Neo tool and is also working with Trenitalia.
Richard
Young at Heathrow Express says the company is working to push its API to tech
partners. Online booking tool Atriis, used as a white label product by many of
the mid-size TMCs, already grabs content from the API as does Travelport’s
Smartpoint app. Young says: “Heathrow Express is working closely with other GDSs
and we are certainly very interested in working with the managed travel
industry.”
Consumer
experience
Yorkshire-based
Fleetondemand, which has its roots in the car sector, is pioneering what is
known as mobility as a service, or MaaS, through its Mobilleo app which
integrates urban mobility, domestic city to city travel and onward travel
around the globe.
Justin
Whitston, the company’s CEO, says Mobilleo allows users to “find travel, book
it and pay for it in the way the consumer wants to pay for it”.
The
company’s technology powers a platform launched recently by Transport for
Greater Manchester which brings together car hire, car clubs, trains, buses and
Metrolink trams in the city as part of an EU-funded project called IMOVE which
also piloted projects in Berlin, Gothenburg, Madrid and Turin.
“Two
of the biggest users of that were Manchester Airport Group and the NHS,” says
Whitston. The
company is also working with local authorities around the country, such as the
West Midlands, Derby, Nottingham and Southampton, as they implement ultra low
emission zones in the way London has done.
Whitston
sees its company’s direct-to-consumer proposition as akin to what TripActions
and TravelPerk are offering but being able to drive different objectives. “Say,
for example, a business has pool cars sitting around, we can skin our tech to
brand those as car club vehicles and bring them into use.
“If
you think about the typical TMC, they are focused around the flight, the hotel
and, to a lesser extent, the car. The car experience is the poor relation in
that market,” he says.
The
company is looking at SMEs with up to £1million spend and uses the
consumer-grade technology that travellers in these companies are likely to
expect.
He
says, “In the next three to five years, MaaS and the integration of
micromobility and public transport content into the TMC model is going to go
mainstream.”
Just like in the railroad
wars, those taking part in moving people from A to B will realise that working
together is best for everyone.